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What we know (now) about the FBI CIPAV spyware

posted onJuly 29, 2007
by hitbsecnews

Tucked into an affidavit filed by an FBI agent last month was the first hard evidence that G-men are equipped with more than automatic pistols and handcuffs: the agency was asking a federal judge to let it infect a PC with spyware so they could finger its owner.

The case, which was reported locally in Olympia, Wash. last month and received more national exposure this month, involved bomb threats e-mailed to Timberline High School in Lacey, Wash.; an IP trail that went cold in Italy; and a call to the FBI.

Special Agent Norm Sanders, who swore out the affidavit, could be Efrem Zimbalist Jr.'s doppelganger for all we know, but he must have been more talkative than the close-lipped character from the late-1960s TV drama "The F.B.I" to win over a judge. Sanders had to spill some beans about CIPAV, the agency's name for what the rest of us would call spyware -- software the FBI wanted to plant on the PC used to e-mail the bomb threats in the hope of identifying its owner, and thus the sender.

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